Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
Anything to Declare?
Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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When your kids are driving you crazy, there are two default responses.

One is to declare a universal “NO”

No, you cannot jump off the roof.

No, you cannot drive two hundred miles to a rock concert with someone you just met online.

No, you cannot see what happens when you put a whole cantaloupe in the microwave and hit “5 minutes.”

Sometimes “no” IS the right answer.

But the other automatic parental default is, surprisingly, the polar opposite. Need to get restless and rustling kids out from underfoot? “Go out and play!”

The directive “GO out and play” removes children from the world they are trying to manipulate and orchestrate. “Go out and play” is parent-speak for “Drop all the other stuff and just go explore life and enjoy the world.” It is, basically, the big YES!

“Go Out and Play!” is life’s big “Yes!”

From our first Christmas-tree extravaganzas, we all fondle and foster a love of “stuff.” We want to accumulate and accommodate. We want the good stuff and the even greater stuff. We always want more. More what? More “stuff.”

It is a hard thing to hear, then, today’s gospel text. For in this third “sending” story in which Jesus gives his missionaries instructions for the road, he tells his trusted troubadours of the kingdom not to take any “toys” with them. No “stuff.”

They are not to pack up any “extras” as they undertake their journey. They are not to bring extra money, extra clothing, extra sandals. (Yes, even in the first century, shoes are different than packing other stuff!) In twenty-first century terminology that means no “game boys,” no platinum cards, no Tom Ford Tuscan Leather cologne, no Prada leather handbags, no back-up Prince Harry blue suede shoes. All those accessories only downplay what Jesus told his disciples to bring with them, what Jesus had entrusted to them — his anointing and authority, and the message of the kingdom of God.

There is one time when no one boasts and brags about what they have, and when the less you carry with you the better off you are: when getting off a plane from an international flight and entering customs. As you approach the customs area you are faced with two choices. There is one line for those who have “nothing to declare.” There is another line — a long, sad, often grid-locked line — for those who have something to declare.

For those who do not have “stuff” — for those with “Nothing To Declare,” you can cruise on through.

For those who admit they do have “stuff” — for those with “Something to Declare” – they are at the mercy and minuscule scrutiny of those who are “large and in charge.”

From Luke’s text we hear Jesus admonishing his seventy messengers to take nothing of value with them. So surely, you say, they are a “nothing to declare” group. They can go through the easy door.

But no. Just the opposite. They have a very firm, very specific declaration to make. In fact, they have everything to declare.

Irish playwright and poet Oscar Wilde conducted an “American Tour” in 1882. These eleven months were less a “lecture tour” (even though he delivered 140 lectures) than a publicity stunt, since Wilde was only 27 and had a track-record as a “distinguished author” of one failed play. The last thing you would call him was an international celebrity.

When Wilde arrived at Staten Island, he was asked by a customs officer if he had anything to declare. His famous response: “I have nothing to declare but my genius.”

What do you have to declare this morning? What line do you take?

Anyone here this morning come from Appalachian culture? If you did, you’d recognize a phrase: “I declare.” If you wanted to express wonderment or approval to something someone else said, you’re response was “Well, I declare.” Said of course with that certain mountain twang. My hero is that 19th century Scottish bard William McGonagall (1825-1902), who achieved notoriety for being such a bad poet, partly by doing such things as rhyming “fair” with “I do declare.” In fact, I’ve always suspected Jesus had some Appalachian in him when in the parable of the 10 Bridesmaids, he had the bridegroom say to five of them, “I declare, I do now know you” (Matthew 7:23). But you get the picture.

Every one of you here this morning will be asked this week, in one form or another: “Anything to declare?”

For every one of you here this morning is as surely sent out by Jesus into the world as these first missionaries were in our text for today. That is why I never know what to put down when those psychological tests, like the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory), ask the question: “Do you believe you are a special agent of the Lord?” You know that if you put fill in the “Yes” circle you have just tripped a wire that puts you in a “delusions of grandeur” category or “messianic complex.” But if you fill in the “No” circle, have you not just betrayed your mission, your sentness?

Christ’s messengers — whether sent out by Jesus in the first century, or sent out by Jesus in the twenty-first century are confronted by a world that asks at every turn: “Anything to Declare?”

And we say? What line do we take?

Christ’s sent ones never declare their own agenda, never declare their own gifts, never declare their own “genius.” Instead, Jesus’ disciples “declare” one thing and only one thing — the coming of the kingdom of God. “Seek first the kingdom of God…[not your gifts and graces and other such “stuff,” but “God’s righteousness”] and all good things will be added unto you” (Matt.6:33). Because we have “nothing to declare” but God’s grace, and God’s glory, we actually have everything to declare. The heavens declare the glory of God…to the psalmist (19:1), to the scientist and to you? In fact, we have so much to declare that we must take the slow line, the difficult line.

But there is one more feature of our text this morning that we cannot skip over with integrity. The slow line, the difficult line, the narrow line, is a treacherous line. You will stir things up. Doors will be slammed in your face. People will yell at you. You will face the diabolic.

“Diabolos” comes from “dia” meaning “around through” and “bollo” meaning “to throw.” That’s where we get our word “ball.” So literally “I declare-ers” will be tossed about, thrown around, played with like a ball. “Diabolos” literally means “the one who throws things around.” This is what the “father of lies” does: toss you around until you lose your vocation of “sentness” and your identity as “sent ones.”

Which is why we take nothing but the bare essentials of a back-pack with us. We travel light. Cargo space gives elbow room for the Great Confuser, “Diabolos,” to work. We travel light with nothing to declare but Jesus Christ.

“Well, I declare.”

Which line will you take?


COMMENTARY

Jesus first sent out his twelve disciples on a mission to proclaim the kingdom and heal with the King’s own power and authority (9:1-6). Next Jesus sent out an unspecified number of messengers to prepare the way for his Jerusalem journey. But there was a third “sending.” Only Luke’s gospel records this third “sending” mission, the subject of our sermon today.

As with the first two “sendings,” these emissaries are sent out before Jesus as he makes his way towards Jerusalem. But this group is doing more than finding venues or villages that would host Jesus as he was on his way. This third group of messengers, like the original Twelve, have a mission of their own to fulfill.

There is disagreement among the earliest existing manuscripts over the number of emissaries Jesus actually sent out this third time. Some count “seventy” while others record “seventy-two.” Those who favor the seventy-two call attention to Genesis 10, which lists all the nations of the world as numbering seventy two. The “world-wide” number suggests that Jesus’ mission and message, as will be elaborated in Luke’s second volume The Acts of the Apostles, is already being positioned to distribute beyond the bounds of the Jewish faith.

Those who favor the manuscripts that record “seventy” point to Numbers 11:16-17, where Moses picks seventy elders to work among the people, and to Exodus 24:1, 9-14, where these elders accompany Moses onto the holy mountain. Also in Numbers 11:26-30 Moses admonishes those who would stop others from prophesying, just as Jesus had so recently in Luke’s gospel chastised John for trying to stop others who were using Jesus’ name to cast out demons (9:49).

Jesus explains the reason for this new wave of messengers as part of a greater outreach. The potential harvest of those who will hear and respond is “plentiful.” Thus more “laborers,” more messengers, are needed. This new wave of missionaries, however, may experience more hostility and rejection than did the first mission of the Twelve. As they are journeying with Jesus to Jerusalem, these emissaries have stepped beyond the familiar borders of home. As the hospitality-seeking messengers in 9:51-56 found in the Samaritan regions, a welcome reception is no longer a given. Rejection and even risk tinges the air as Jesus warns this third wave of envoys that they are being sent out like “lambs into the midst of wolves” (v.3). Likewise, for this group Jesus specifically sends his chosen ones out “in pairs,” for apparently now messaging and missioning, like swimming, should never be done alone. Jesus inaugurates here the “buddy system” for sentness.

Much of what Jesus tells this third group, however, sounds like his previous instructions to The Twelve: carry no purse, no bag, no sandals. In other words, there is no safety net. Still Jesus does add a parental-sounding “Never talk to strangers” rule, reflecting his sensibility to the potential hostility that now haunts the mission. And Jesus also gives this third group of missionaries a kind of “open-sesame” key to detecting the receptivity of a household to the message of the kingdom.

He instructs them to declare “Peace to this house” as they enter into each new location. The declaration of “peace,” “shalom,” was not just an announcement of one’s peaceful intentions. It was the extension of the “shalom” that was the divine gift from God. Those who would be open and welcoming to this shalom would also be receptive to the new word of peace, the message of the kingdom, that Jesus’ seventy messengers bring.

As with the mission of The Twelve, Jesus stipulates that there is to be no “shopping around” for any better accommodations. Those who initially welcome in Jesus’ emissaries are not to be abandoned. Their hospitality is to be graced with the “peace” their visitors bring for the duration of their stay. No “upgrades” are allowed on this mission trip.

At the outset of his description of this third missionary “sending,” Luke does not note that Jesus imbued his messengers with healing powers. It now becomes evident that such authority and anointing is part of what they take with them. In v.9 Jesus’ instructions to his emissaries include healing the sick and declaring the that the “kingdom of God has come near to you,” essentially the same mission and message he had given when he sent out The Twelve (9:2). However, even as the potential of hostility has increased with this third wave of messengers, so are now revealed the long-range ramifications of rejection.

No longer are Jesus’ emissaries simply told literally and symbolically to shake the dust off their feet and leave those villages that reject them and their message. The fate of those who take a “pass” on the kingdom is revealed to be worse than that of Sodom. To slam the door shut on the good news opens wide the windows and doors to judgment.

In this week’s lectionary reading, we flash-forward to the progress report of these returning seventy messengers. The power of Jesus’ name and the authority given to them to wield that name are now evident. “Even the demons submit to us,” the messengers exclaim. In Luke’s first use of the term “Satan” rather than “the devil,” the exultant emissaries of Jesus describe the “fall from heaven” of this enemy, using language that clearly echoes the scene described in Isaiah 14:1-27. Because rejecting Jesus and his messengers is akin to rejecting “the one who sent me,” the power of God is behind the authority made available to Jesus’ emissaries. Even Satan himself can be cast down.

The final word in this week’s text is not focused on judgment, but on redemption. Instead of delighting in their power over evil, Jesus calls these seventy new disciples to rejoice “that your names are written in heaven.” The redemption and reward offered by God is the true gift of the kingdom and the ultimate “peace” they have to offer.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet